Okay. I will try to summarize.
Looking towards the future, the Honduran economy has been underperforming in the Latin American economy for the last decade and in all likelihood it will continue to underperform. There is no economic forecast from anywhere—I've checked Bloomberg, Reuters, and everywhere else—that says that Honduras will grow fast. It will not. It just will not. It's not an emerging country.
According to the World Bank, Honduras is also one of the most expensive countries in which to run a business given its convoluted and politically rigged regulatory systems, a non-functioning court system, and massive corruption. It is ranked 141 out of 183 nations by the World Bank. Only Haiti is ranked lower in the western hemisphere.
Another problem—I would like to mention it later on, perhaps, in the question and answer period—is that Honduras, as you know, has an enormous security problem. There were 7,200 murders in 2012. That is 20 murders per day, as compared with two murders per day in Canada, which has four times more population. The levels of violence are actually increasing in Honduras, unlike in the other Central American countries.
That is a striking disincentive for any entrepreneur to start a business in Honduras in terms of export or the local market. Capital accumulation is close to impossible, as we know for any economies that work on issues related to security, given the extortion that Maras and other gangs demanded from approximately 90% of all firms there in 2012, with kidnapping—